Other features include dynamic image streaming, auto pagination, auto cropping and transparent image overlay. It only takes a few minutes to set-up and the layout, speed, co-ordination and text can easily be modified in the settings.

desoSlide is simple jQuery image slider with thumbnails. You can control the slider by clicking or pressing your keyboard keys. Also there are some options to customize slider. Caption is avaliable for each image.

MediaSlide is a media gallery viewer plugin with a sliding thumbnail bar - performs transition effects when you move between images.

This plugin supports many different sources for media galleries - it can read galleries directly from your Flickr account, or they can be specified via XML or JSON. Also many customization parameters are provided.

Gallerie is a jQuery plugin that offers a basic lightbox-like gallery viewer of a collection of images.

It features a simple overlay with a scrollable thumbnail list, image loading hint, as well as an image caption and index. The overlay thumbnails automatically scroll with the user's mouse and can be activated by click or custom event.

When adding captions to the bottom of a thumbnail it can happen that a thumbnail that is overflowing the viewport (i.e. is partly beyond the “fold”) is being hovered but the caption won’t be seen because it appears on the bottom part of the image that is not visible. The user would have to scroll the page in order to see the bottom of the item and eventually the caption.

A small trick can solve that problem by simply making the caption “sticky”. This would mean that the caption will be visible not only at the bottom of every thumbnail but also in any place, sticking at the bottom of the page, if the thumbnail hovered is overflowing the current view.

StackSlider is a highly experimental jQuery image slider plugin that explores a different and fun viewing concept for thumbnails, utilizing CSS 3D transforms and perspective.

The idea is to navigate through two piles of images where the transition resembles an item being lifted off from the top of the stack and moved/rotated to the center of the container to be viewed. The previously viewed image falls on the opposite stack.